Times Colonist

Family benefits given a boost as deficit rises to $7.9 billion

Home-flipping tax among measures in finance minister’s election-year package

- DIRK MEISSNER The Canadian Press and ROXANNE EGAN-ELLIOTT Times Colonist

Families and small business operators in B.C. are expected to benefit in an election-year budget that boosts spending, but forecasts a deficit of more than $7.9 billion and economic growth of less than one per cent.

The budget pledges to introduce a home-flipping tax to deter real estate speculator­s and a commitment to provide one cycle of free in-vitro fertilizat­ion to anyone who wants to start a family, Finance Minister Katrine Conroy said Thursday.

B.C. is an economic leader in Canada but a slowing economy and increasing housing and grocery costs mean people needed help, she said.

“At the end of the day, people have a lot on their minds right now and they’re feeling stretched,” Conroy said in her budget speech to the legislatur­e.

She said the New Democrat government would not resort to making cuts.

“This would only weaken the services we all rely on and drive up costs with added fees and fares,” Conroy said. “It would leave people at risk to those who take unfair advantage by putting profits ahead of people.”

The budget includes a one-year boost to the B.C. Family Benefit, giving eligible low- and middle-income families an extra $445 over a year on average, as well as a one-time electricit­y credit that will save households an average $100, she said. The electricit­y credits will appear on customer bills starting in April and run to March 2025.

Conroy said the home-flipping tax, to be introduced this spring, will fund the constructi­on of housing for middleinco­me earners.

“To those who just want to make a quick buck by flipping homes, things are about to get more difficult,” she said.

“If a home is sold within two years of purchase, the profit will be taxed.”

The budget forecasts slowing economic growth of 0.8 per cent this year, followed by growth of 2.3 per cent in 2025. B.C.’s debt is forecast to increase to $123 billion this year, up from $103.7 billion.

The budget included funding for previously announced projects on Vancouver Island, many of which saw cost increases from their original announceme­nts. The province allocated $54 million, up from $46.5 million, for a seismic replacemen­t of Cedar Hill Middle School with capacity for 575 students. Scheduled for occupancy in 2025, the school will include an Indigenous space and low-carbon design features.

The budget has $49 million, up from $39.6 million, for a new school in Langford. South Langford Elementary will have space for 480 students and is slated for opening in 2025.

Two new buildings with 217 beds are coming to North Island College in 2025 at a price tag of $78 million, while a seven-storey student housing and dining building with 266 beds at Vancouver Island University is expected to be complete in 2026.

A new child-care space at North Island College is planned at a cost of $15 million. It will provide 75 spaces in a region the province says has a high demand for child care and will include spaces for infant and toddler care, school age care and care for kids who need extra support. The project is anticipate­d to be complete in 2025.

An additional $23 million over three years to services contracted with B.C. Ferries will address the rising cost of fuel and mechanical maintenanc­e for contractor­s who operate ferry services on unregulate­d routes, as well as fare discounts for students, seniors and those travelling for medical purposes.

Post-secondary institutio­n spending is projected to increase by $845 million, from $8.39 billion in 2023-2024 to $9.23 billion by 2026-2027. The increase is mostly due to staffing demands to meet a growing student base, the province says.

Last year, a group of post-secondary unions urged the province to increase funding to universiti­es and colleges to offset budget cuts that resulted in job losses. The University of Victoria announced a $13-million budget cut this month, citing declining revenue as internatio­nal enrolment continues to drop.

A UVic spokespers­on said it was too early to say how the new budget might impact the university.

BC United Opposition Leader Kevin Falcon called the budget a “foolish” use of taxpayers’ money. “This is a reckless, inflationa­ry budget that’s going to make things more unaffordab­le for families,” he said after Conroy’s speech. “When government is spending this recklessly, it drives inflationa­ry pressures, which impacts groceries, it impacts housing, it impacts everything that is already affecting British Columbians.”

Falcon said the ballooning debt would be handed down to future generation­s and the province’s credit rating was in danger of downgrades due to the spending.

He said young people are being driven out of the province because of living costs. “We are seeing young people in the prime of their working lives fleeing British Columbia for Alberta, for Ontario, for almost anywhere but British Columbia, because they’re tired of living in an NDP world,” he said. “We’ve become the most unaffordab­le, expensive jurisdicti­on in the entire country, and I think that’s very sad and tragic for families.”

Green Party Leader Sonia Furstenau said the NDP missed an opportunit­y to help people who are struggling during difficult times. “At a time when we needed bold investment­s in the people and the future of this province, we got a government that found a way to spend $89 billion and achieve status quo,” she said. “It’s an astonishin­g feat, actually.”

B.C. voters are set to go the polls in October.

 ?? CHAD HIPOLITO, THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Finance Minister Katrine Conroy tables the budget in at the B.C. legislatur­e on Thursday.
CHAD HIPOLITO, THE CANADIAN PRESS Finance Minister Katrine Conroy tables the budget in at the B.C. legislatur­e on Thursday.
 ?? DARREN STONE, TC ?? Kevin Falcon at the legislatur­e on Thursday.
DARREN STONE, TC Kevin Falcon at the legislatur­e on Thursday.

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